| Literature DB >> 27699631 |
Lane Koenig1, Qian Zhang2, Matthew S Austin3, Berna Demiralp4, Thomas K Fehring5, Chaoling Feng4, Richard C Mather6, Jennifer T Nguyen4, Asha Saavoss4, Bryan D Springer5, Adolph J Yates7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Demand for total hip arthroplasty (THA) is high and expected to continue to grow during the next decade. Although much of this growth includes working-aged patients, cost-effectiveness studies on THA have not fully incorporated the productivity effects from surgery. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We asked: (1) What is the expected effect of THA on patients' employment and earnings? (2) How does accounting for these effects influence the cost-effectiveness of THA relative to nonsurgical treatment?Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27699631 PMCID: PMC5085951 DOI: 10.1007/s11999-016-5084-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res ISSN: 0009-921X Impact factor: 4.176
Fig. 1A–BThe Markov health state transition of both treatment arms is shown. (A) For nonoperative treatment, a patient enters a nonsurgery state and proceeds to end-stage hip OA, and then either remains there or transitions to a more severe state with greater functional impairment. (B) For surgical treatment (THA), a patient either dies or survives the primary THA. After initial surgery, the model assumes that individuals remain in a postprocedure state for 1 year (Initial Post-THA), which accounts for the costs and limitations of treatment and recovery and any complications. After surviving the initial (first year) post-THA state, patients either may enter the successful THA state or undergo a revision and thus enter the post-first THA early revision state. For patients entering successful THA state, they may remain in this health state or have late failure, undergo a revision, and thus enter the post-first THA late revision state. For patients entering the post-first THA early or late revision, they may remain in this health state or require a second revision, which was considered as a transitional health state (not seen in the Markov process).
Transition probabilities, utilities, and medical costs in the Markov model for THA
| Parameter | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Mortality | ||
| Natural death | Varies by age and gender | US Census Bureau Life Expectancy Table [ |
| Perioperative THA death | Varies by age and gender | Memtsoudis et al. [ |
| Perioperative revision death | Age < 75 years: 0.003; age ≥ 75 years: 0.012 | Mota [ |
| Revision | ||
| Early aseptic first revision | Varies by age and gender | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Late aseptic first revision | Varies by age and gender | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Early aseptic second revision | 0.0583 | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Late aseptic second revision | 0.022 | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Early infection first revision | Varies by age and gender | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Late infection first revision | Varies by age and gender | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Early infection second revision | 0.017 | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Late infection second revision | 0.006 | Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry [ |
| Transitional probability of nonoperative treatment to more severe OA | ||
| More severe OA | 0.041 | Mota [ |
| Utility | ||
| End-stage hip OA | Varies by gender | Value for males: 0.52; for females: 0.47; Mota [ |
| Nonsurgery | Varies by gender | Value for males: 0.52; for females: 0.47; Mota [ |
| More severe OA | 0.28 | Mota [ |
| Initial post-THA | 0.74 | Mota [ |
| Successful post-THA | Varies by gender | Values for males: 0.83; for females: 0.8; Mota [ |
| Post-first revision THA (early and late) | 0.64 | Mota [ |
| Post-second THA revision | 0.58 | Mota [ |
| Annual direct medical costs | ||
| End-stage OA/nonsurgery/more severe OA | USD 12,815 | Current authors’ calculation |
| Initial post-THA | USD 38,965 | Current authors’ calculation |
| Successful THA | USD 12,225 | Base value: medical cost of end-stage OA USD 590; current authors’ calculation |
| First aseptic revision THA (early and late) | USD 57,141 | Current authors’ calculation |
| First infection revision THA (early and late) | USD 95,763 | Current authors’ calculation |
OA = osteoarthritis.
Annual change in earnings and value of missed work
| Gender/age | Change in earnings (in USD) | Change in value of missed work (in USD) | Total change in productivity (in USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | |||
| 40–49 years | 14,486 | 1344 | 15,830 |
| 50–59 years | 15,408 | 991 | 16,399 |
| 60–64 years | 14,021 | 397 | 14,419 |
| 65–69 years | 9336 | 79 | 9415 |
| 70–74 years | 4283 | –9 | 4274 |
| ≥75 years* | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Female | |||
| 40–49 years | 11,781 | 761 | 12,542 |
| 50–59 years | 12,352 | 559 | 12,911 |
| 60–64 years | 9930 | 167 | 10,097 |
| 65–69 years | 5477 | −6 | 5470 |
| 70–74 years | 1927 | −10 | 1917 |
| ≥ 75 years* | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Values represent the 1-year difference in earnings or value of missed work between THA and nonoperative treatment options; *we assumed individuals retire by 75 years and therefore surgery results in no change in earnings, missed work days, or total productivity.
Summary of the lifetime costs and savings from THA by age
| Age group | Incremental direct cost (A) (in USD) | Incremental indirect cost savings (B) (in USD) | Net societal savings (C) (in USD) | QALY gained (D) | ICER (C/D) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 65 years | 28,067 | 125,958 | 97,892 | 7.0 | Dominant |
| 40–49 years | 28,905 | 218,738 | 189,833 | 8.3 | Dominant |
| 50–59 years | 28,128 | 136,023 | 107,894 | 7.1 | Dominant |
| 60–64 years | 27,564 | 65,659 | 38,095 | 6.0 | Dominant |
| ≥ 65 years | 32,323 | 10,052 | −22,271 | 4.2 | −5255 |
| 65–69 years | 30,147 | 28,157 | −1990 | 5.4 | −371 |
| 70–74 years | 30,162 | 5664 | −24,497 | 4.4 | −5618 |
| ≥ 75 years | 35,468 | 0 | −35,468 | 3.3 | −10,748 |
| All | 30,365 | 63,314 | 32,948 | 5.5 | Dominant |
ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; Net societal savings = Column B minus Column A; QALY = quality adjusted life year; weights by gender in age groups were calculated using 2011 National Inpatient Sample data.
Base case and threshold values for zero net societal savings
| Parameter | Base case (male, female) | Age 55 years | Age 60 years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Threshold | Threshold | ||
| First aseptic revision rate (early) | 1.31%, 1.13% | Robust | Robust |
| First aseptic revision rate (late) | 0.61%, 0.63% | Robust | Robust |
| First infection revision rate (early) | 0.20%, 0.17% | Robust | Robust |
| First infection revision rate (late) | 0.09% | Robust | Robust |
| End-stage osteoarthritis [ | USD 12,815 | Robust | Robust |
| Initial post-THA (365 days) | USD 38,965 | USD 123,700 (female) | USD 78,800 (female) |
| Productivity | Varies by age and gender | 26% of base (female) | 41% of base (female) |
Parameters are considered robust if net savings remain at 10 times the value of the base case; direct cost of end-stage osteoarthritis includes all medical costs, not just those associated with treatment of osteoarthritis.
Fig. 2The Y-axis and X-axis values of each dot correspond to the incremental cost and incremental effectiveness (THA vs nonsurgery) for a sampling of 1000 average American patients (mean age, 66 years; sex, 42% women). The dispersion illustrates the effect of uncertainty of the indirect cost parameters, which follow logistic and lognormal distribution for male and female patients respectively. QALYs = quality adjusted life years